Transforming building maintenance and repair in Hayes

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Abseiling for Construction & Building Maintenance in Hayes

It is not always possible to access your Hayes building once the scaffold has been struck and using cherry pickers is simply too expensive. To put things in perspective, our abseilers can usually complete the task for the cost of hiring a cherrypicker! and that doesn’t include anyone to actually complete the work you need, it’s only the hiring cost.

If you add that to the inconvenience of trying manoeuvre a massive lorry to the work area, abseiling really does make sense. Or abseilers can reach any area of your building to assist with installations or repair an ongoing issue, be it a leaking gutter, replacing glazing, adding an expansion joint or inspecting for faults.

Using abseiling for building maintenance

Our services

Rope Access Building Maintenance Services for Hayes And Surrounding Counties

Periodic testing & certification of class A1 anchors and fall protection equipment.

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Using professional stone cleaning systems and abseiling methods, stone can be cleaned perfectly.

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No need for scaffold or cherry pickers to repair an exterior leak. Our abseilers can do it.

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    Facts About Hayes

    Hayes History

    The name Hayes is recorded from 1177 as hoese from the Anglo-Saxon meaning “a settlement in open land overgrown with shrubs and rough bushes”.It formed an ancient, and later civil, parish of Kent of around 1,282 acres. The village stood at the junction of Hayes Lane, leading north to Bromley, and what is now known as Pickhurst Lane, leading west to West Wickham; the centre of the old village is now called Hayes Street.

    Both William Pitt the Elder, 1st Earl of Chatham, and William Pitt the Younger lived at Hayes Place. The house dated back to the 15th century, was rebuilt in 1972, but then demolished in 1933 by the developer Henry Boot and the site redeveloped, but its occupants are remembered in such road names as Chatham and Pittsmead Avenues.

    General Info

    Hayes is a suburban area of South East London, England, within the London Borough of Bromley and the historic county of Kent. It is located 11 miles south-east of Charing Cross, to the north of Keston and Coney Hall, west of Bromley Common, south of Bromley town centre, and east of West Wickham.